This story takes a while to get to the sexual content. It's a slow burn to begin so if that's not your thing, please read something else. For those of you who like a good set up, please enjoy.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Hi. My name is Mickey, as in Mantle. Dad was a Bronx guy and huge Yankees fan, and he convinced my mom to name me after his favorite player back in 1962. It wasn't unusual; a lot of boys were named for the great MM back then. Unfortunately, I wasn't a jock growing up, just a mediocre athlete at best, so I took a lot of (mostly) good natured grief over my name versus my ability. No big deal. I still played softball and football growing up, playing just for the fun of it.
Dad may have grown up in the Bronx, but I grew up in Queens, not far from Shea Stadium, which we could see from our apartment window. We also had views of LaGuardia Airport and the Manhattan skyline. If I still had that apartment, it would be worth a fortune now. Queens was a great place to grow up in the 60s and 70s. We were middle class in a mostly Jewish-Italian-Irish-German neighborhood, with smatterings of other ethnic groups, like Chinese, Greek, Latins. Queens was, and still is, the ultimate American melting pot. My family was Jewish, as were most, but certainly not all, my friends.
My high school was a melting pot itself. Roughly a third white, a third black or Hispanic and a third everything else. In September of 1979, I was a senior and starting to apply to colleges. That was when I first met Darejani.
She was my age, 18, and she just transferred to our school after her parents fled Iran in the wake of the Islamic revolution there. That was traumatic enough for her. Then the "students" there took over the American Embassy on November 4th and took the staff there hostage. And that made Darejani a target for a lot of shit from a lot of idiots.
I didn't know her really when she first transferred to our school. After all, I was a senior with friends I knew for years, and she was a new student who knew no one, so there wasn't much socializing. She mostly kept to herself and being from a much more conservative culture, she didn't make many friends at first. When I did notice her in the halls, I certainly noticed how beautiful she was. Petite, with a matching body, about 5'3", a lovely dark complexion, fine features and jet black hair. But I didn't really know her to start.
That changed one afternoon in early November, maybe a week after the hostage crisis began. I was walking down the main corridor near some lockers when I saw Darejani trying to get to her locker. I say trying, because these three guys and one girl, all who had reputations for being jerks and bad news, were blocking her. They were taunting her, calling her names I won't repeat and threatening to do terrible things to her. Tears were rolling down her cheeks as she tried to get past them. The worst part was there was a teacher standing maybe 15 feet away, ignoring the way those four assholes were tormenting this small girl.
I was on a spot here, at least in my own mind. The way I was raised, I couldn't just let this poor girl be bullied like this. She had nothing to do with the nightmare in Tehran. I didn't relish the idea of an ass whipping, but someone had to do something, and the teacher wasn't going to do it.
Summoning up my courage, what little there was, I went over to the confrontation and asked Darejani "Hi, do you need some help getting something from your locker?" Her eyes, big and dark, looked both terrified and grateful at the same time.
"I, uh, I need my purse so I can go home" she said in heavily accented English.
I just stepped into the group of tormenters, as they moved aside grudgingly. I think if that teacher hadn't been there, it wouldn't have gone so favorably for me. Darejani got into her locker and got her purse and I walked with her to the exit of the school.
Outside, I introduced myself and asked if she needed help getting home.
"No, thank you, I can get home by myself." She barely made eye contact with me.
"Listen, Darejani....do you mind if I just call you Dar?"
She nodded her head to say it was ok with her.
"Dar, those guys are jerks, cruel and dumb, but none of them would ever hit a girl. Except maybe their girlfriend. But here in public, where it would get around? No way. Me, maybe. But not you. Not even Tina, the she-wolf they were with."
Dar was quiet. She was so shy, it was painful.
"Well, I'm glad I was able to help you. Be safe going home. And remember, most of us aren't like those fools. It's a tough time now, but things get better." And I turned to go on my way.
"Mickey? May I ask you something?"
"Sure, anything, I guess."
"Why? Why did you help me? We don't know each other. Iranians are hated here. Why did you stop to help me?"
She really wanted to know. I could see it in her eyes. It really mattered to her. "I think they just pissed me off. I don't like bullies in general, and four on one, and the one is a young girl....it just made me angry. I didn't want to fight them, it's not like I would have had a chance if I did, but some things are just wrong. And that teacher, Mrs. Wahl, was the worst. Anyway, I would have done it for anyone in that spot. As I said, some things are just wrong. My parents would have expected me to say something. It's the way I was raised."
Her eyes were so grateful now. I noticed for the first time how really beautiful she was. "Thank you, Mickey. Very much. Bye." And she almost scurried off, like she was ashamed. And that hurt my heart, the way she had been made to feel so unsafe and humiliated.
Over the course of the school year, Darejani and I would say hi, and sometimes she'd even give me a shy smile, which gradually became more friendly. I noticed she even developed a few friends, which I was glad to see. She really was a very pretty girl with a lovely face. I even thought about asking her out, but I just couldn't muster up the nerve to ask.
I worked on the school paper, reporting the kind of stories you find in school papers, school events, sports, neighborhood happenings (we were in a semi-urban environment). It wasn't my goal for a career, but I enjoyed it and it looked good on my college applications. One day in March, Darejani came in and told the editor she was looking to work on the paper. He gave her some basic tasks and she did them perfectly. So he assigned her to me to train her as a novice reporter.
"Hey, Dar. It's good to see you."